66 Give YOllrself a SIla ve Break .- ,,,:,-? , . .' <:;'.:-, -*' ." . l.P. ,.ý . - '.' : . .:<.... p %- ,,,,. . . ..... . ^ .::::: .:.:: ::... .:: ::: '::: ' .:t; ,.4 V =i .: .' ..... '.' . ) -.- .. . -^" ')(0 .,. G) '\... i- )(0 it. t \ #. I :;. .1" -: , .:. " "-. " ,. ':::. .:.:. . '" .' .;.. . h..... ::. , ..y -:- -::. .. "- . y -^::.:;^':"^ '-., J. r :Æ.::'-:" 'fhis is the kind of break your beard could use these days - Arden for Men After Shave Lotion Its cool, tangy refre hment leaves your skin feeling great, looking great. A smooth finish for the light, rich and lathery action of Arden for 1en Foam Shaving Cream There you have it! Arden for Men who \vant to give their skjn a real break. After Shave Lotion 3.50;t 6.50 plus Fed. tax Foam. Shavtng Cream 1.50 Write for the Arden for 1-1en Catalogue Þ.1ail and phone orders filled ARDEN ,FOR MEN 'lEast 54, N. Y. 21, N. Y. PL 9-2940 In "v.}.C. ad(J 3% Sall!s !a . areas predicted by protectionists before the treaty was signed. (A few specIal dispensations have been granted; for example, the Italian sulphur industry, whIch operates rather primitively, will continue to receive full tariff protec- tion until it has had time to modern- ize.) Hbwever, since practically all pro- tective tariffs are set at levels SQmew hat higher than the minimum necessary to afford protection-they have fat on them, as economists quaintly say-the second fifty-per-cent reduction will un- doubtedly cause more griet. than the first. And it should, for a customs union that did not painfully compe] an In- crease in competitiveness would exist to no purpose. Any grief caused by the Common Market's external tariff, on the other hand, will be to outsiders-outsiders like the United States, which is naturally trying to hold or increase its share In the European market through reciprocal tariff reductions-for by its very na- ture any customs union practices trade discrimination against the rest of the world. The question of exactly ho'w discriminator} the Common Market is, or will be, is the subject of hot debate. For example, nght after the formation of the Common Market, Fortune be- gan grumbling about how a reduction in tariffs among its members would amount, in practice, to a raise in its tar- iffs against outsiders, and in other cir- cles the Common Market has been dis- missed inelegantly as a "trading bloc." Common Market men, on the other hand, insist that the organization needs an external tariff to hold it together. "It l.,^ is as important as a certain amount of cement to a house," Hugo L. deGrood, who is in charge of the Community's Bureau of Bilateral Relations, Division of North America, said recently. But the evidence thus far does not show that the Cornmon Market intends to be unduly protectionist. On the contrary. The effect of averaging the tariffs of the Six as they eXIsted before the Rome treaty is, roughly, to double those of the Benelux countries, to halve those of F ranee and Italy, and to leave those of West Ger- mdny about the same; based on the tota] imports of the Six for 1958, the com- bined duty works out to an average of 7.4 per cent. This is comparable to the present average tariff of the United States, and lower than that of Britain. And the Common Market has shown its willingness to be even more liberal; in 1960, while preparing for a round of tariff negotiations with the United States and other trading partners in which it was hoped that everyone would , " , " .hnr You will find the very finest in natural shoulder clothes In the stores listed below. Birmingham, Ala., Richard's of Mt Brook Buffalo, N. Y., Peller & Mure Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Craemer's Men s Shop Charlotte, N. C., Jack Wood, Ltd. Clayton & St. Louis, Mo. Boyd's Hartford, Conn., G. Fox & Co. Iowa City, Iowa, Moe Whitebook s Kansas City Mo. Woolf Bros. Lexington Ky., Bomanzl, Inc Los Angeles, Cal., Atkinson's Lynchburg, Va., Raby-Jordan Ltd. Lynn, Mass., Judd, Inc. Madison, Wise., MacNeil & Moore Manchester, N. H. Jim's Oxford Shop Milwaukee, Wise., MacNeil & Moore Nashville, Tenn., The Oxford Shop New York, New York, Rosenthal-Maretz Co Norfolk Va., Fishback & Lea, Ltd. Pasadena, Cal., Atkinson's Pittsburgh, Penn., Joseph Horne Co Pittsburgh, Penn., Larrimor's Providence R. I., Harvey Ltd. Ridgewood, Westfield Westwood, N. J. MacHugh s Rochester, N. Y., Ryan, Ltd Santa Ana, Cal., Atkinson's Schenectady, NY., Dall's Tarrytown-on-the-Hudson N. Y., John Charles, Ltd. Utica, N. Y., Webb's Men s Shop Washington, D. C., Lewis & Thos. Saltz, Inc. WauwaTosa Wise., MacNeil & Moore Wellesley, Mass., Ara s Wichita, Kansas, Wm. Dodson, Ltd. AND OTH ER REPRESENTATIVE STORES THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY